Traveling to foreign countries can be tricky sometimes depending on how you get your wireless service. Luckily, there are always services in place to help travelers stay connected to all of information they need. You can almost always have access to some sort of international data service to replace you personal wireless plan to avoid roaming charges. Now, Xcom Global is about to make everything much easier.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 10.1 has become available from T-Mobile. But with Nexus 10 as a competitor, we are not sure many people will be interested. While the Tab 2 10.1 was a solid tablet when it was released, with the Nexus 10 now on the market, it’s going to be hard for T-Mo to move many units.

Google’s perpetual beta philosophy is beneficial for innovation, and that is great. But sometimes important things are neglected, and users end up getting screwed. That happened yesterday, with the world launch of the new Nexus 4, Nexus 7 with 3G, and Nexus 10.

In addition to launching the new Nexus devices today, including the Nexus 4, Nexus 10 and 32GB Nexus 7 flavors, Google has also started rolling out Android 4.2 updates for some of the existing, “older,” Nexus smartphones and tablets. Moreover, the company has also pushed out Android 4.2 to AOSP, which means developers can already tinker with it.

Android tablets have outpaced the growth of the iPad in six out of the eight previous quarters, and if this trend continues, Apple will not be able to claim absolute domination of the tablet market for much longer.

Are you having Nexus-envy seeing the phone and tablets arriving on Google Play in other countries? You won’t have to wait for too long, since Google has confirmed the time of when the latest Nexus devices will be available for purchase in America.

Android enthusiasts in France, Germany, UK, and Spain who have been smitten by the duo Nexus devices can now order the pure Google phone and its 10-inch tablet cousin on Google Play — if they’re lucky enough.